Share

Chapter 3

Author: Cool Husky
"No… that’s impossible… I was almost strangled to death! Look at my neck!"

They had clearly seen the marks on my throat. Unfortunately, in the face of concrete evidence, every argument I made sounded futile.

"We need you to come back to the station and cooperate with the investigation," Officer Cross said. "And the news website page on your computer… We’ll need to examine that as well."

I sat in the police car, staring out at the empty streets before dawn. My mind was a mess.

While I hadn’t died, Mrs. Calder had died in my place.

Had the rules changed? Or had the slot for death been transferred?

Because there was no direct evidence and the injuries on my neck were real, I was allowed to leave at daybreak, but only on the condition that I remain available for questioning at any time.

When I returned home, the stains on the floor outside my door had been collected as evidence, but a faint, fishy stench still lingered.

I stood in the hallway, staring at that door. Just yesterday at this time, Mrs. Calder had been complaining that I was too loud. Now she was a pile of mangled flesh lying in the morgue.

I turned and went back inside, locked the door, and slid down against it until I was sitting on the floor.

My phone vibrated.

"Backup slots are full. In the next cycle, death cannot be transferred."

The next day, the sun came up, and the world went on as usual.

Except for Unit 703.

There was still no movement.

I washed my face and looked at myself in the mirror. The scratch at the corner of my eye was still there. It was thin, narrow, and capped with a faint scab.

I took a deep breath and opened the door.

The hallway was quiet. Unit 703’s door was tightly shut. Mrs. Calder’s milk carton was still lying at the bend of the stairwell, the surface dirty and coated with dust.

I forced myself to suppress the fear and knocked on the door of Unit 703.

"Hello? Is anyone there?"

No answer.

I knocked again.

Across the hall, the door to Unit 701 creaked open. A middle-aged woman poked her head out, trash bag in hand. She glanced at me, then at the door to Unit 703, and lowered her voice.

"Don’t bother knocking. No one’s home." She curled her lip, her eyes full of disdain. "That old hag brought it on herself. Good riddance."

I stood outside Unit 703 for a while longer, then turned back to my apartment and shut the door.

I sat down on the bed and pulled out my phone. There were dozens of unread messages in the work group chat.

"I heard something happened again last night."

Below it, Eric Dawson sent a grinning emoji, then added, "All you night-shift owls stay safe @everyone."

I stared at the emoji, my fingers tightening around the phone.

At 9:00 a.m., I went to the courier station.

Quietly, I made my way to the small records room behind the building. It was crammed with unresolved complaint forms and old delivery logs from past years.

I found the cabinet from three years ago, glanced toward the door to make sure no one was around, grabbed a screwdriver from the tool room, and pried it open.

The cabinet was stuffed with folders, sorted by month. I flipped to September from three years ago.

My fingers slid across the yellowed pages and stopped on a single complaint form.

Complainant: Connie Calder

Courier complained about: Noah Vale

Reason: Package missing; courier suspected of opening parcels and stealing contents

Outcome: Courier terminated; customer compensated for losses

In the signature section below, Mrs. Calder's name was scrawled crookedly.

The courier’s signature line was blank, but beside it was a photograph. It was a grainy surveillance still.

A man in a courier uniform was carrying a cardboard box out of a building. His face was blurred beyond recognition. Below the photo was a handwritten note: "Employee refuses to admit fault. Evidence conclusive. Case transferred to police."

I stared at the image.

The uniform was the old style used by our station which was phased out three years ago.

The man’s height and build looked very much like mine. However, three years ago, I hadn’t even been in this city.

I kept flipping.

There were several supplemental statements tied to the same incident, all written by Mrs. Calder. Each one was harsher than the last, demanding that the thief be severely punished.

In the end, the company paid Mrs. Calder $ 2,000, and she agreed to no longer pursue the matter.

The settlement date was September 15, three years ago.

There was also a newspaper clipping. "Courier Noah Vale Fired After Customer Accuses Him of Package Theft.

"Mr. Vale insists on his innocence, but surveillance footage shows him carrying a parcel away from the customer’s residence.

"It is reported that after losing his job, Mr. Vale’s mental state deteriorated. He repeatedly returned to the customer’s residence to demand an explanation, but was turned away each time."

"As of press time, Mr. Vale has been missing for over a week. His family has expressed concern."

There was no accompanying photo, but the article mentioned the name of the apartment complex.

Unit 704, Building 7, Hawthorne Ridge Apartments.

Had "I" already died long ago?
Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Deadline Is Death   Chapter 9

    At 1:00 a.m., the lights came on in the main hall of the old house.My mother was sitting in a chair. When she saw me, her eyes lit up."Noah…"The other me stepped out from the inner room, a knife in his hand.My mother dropped to her knees, crying and begging. "I was wrong… please save me…""When you sold him back then, did you ever think about today?" I asked coldly. "Answer me."She only cried, refusing to respond.The other me raised the knife, aiming it over her head."Wait," I said. "If you kill her, will you really be free?""I don’t know. But I have to try." After saying that, he lowered his head in silence.My mother seized the chance and ran for the door. She stumbled, hit her head on the doorframe, and collapsed unconscious. Blood seeped from her forehead.I immediately called an ambulance.The other me dropped the knife and knelt on the floor. "You win.""What?""For the first time, someone chose not to kill," he murmured. "The loop is about to break."The s

  • Deadline Is Death   Chapter 8

    I looked at the man on the floor.The knife was in my hand. For a moment, it felt as heavy as a thousand pounds.The man woke up. When he saw me and the knife, he was so terrified that he lost control of himself.I lowered the knife. In the end, I said, "Get out."He scrambled away, crawling and stumbling as he fled.The other me looked at me. "Why?""He wasn’t on the list," I said.He was silent for a moment, then nodded. "The last one. Tomorrow night at the old house."He vanished into the night."Substitute death successful. Remaining loop time: 72 hours."For the first time, that message on my phone made my skin crawl. There was no one else at the old house, only my mother.The rain came down harder.Standing in the rain, I received a photo of a birth certificate.Twins.Noah Vale.Peter Vale.The word "stillborn" was circled in red. My mother had never told me I’d had a twin brother who died at birth.Rain splattered across the screen, mixing with my tears.At th

  • Deadline Is Death   Chapter 7

    "Joe Mack? Is that you?" Eric’s voice started to shake. "Don’t fool around with me…"Footsteps drew closer. I didn’t dare take a single breath."Noah!" he shouted my name. "Noah, are you still here?"I didn’t answer."Noah, I know this is your doing!" His voice cracked, on the verge of tears. "Get the hell out here!"I had already backed into the innermost stall. The door was ajar, and I watched the outside through the narrow gap."Open the door! Open it!" He slammed against something, his voice hoarse.I couldn’t see what was happening. I could only hear struggling. Muffled grunts. The dull thud of a body hitting a wall.It lasted about a minute.Holding my breath, I peered through the crack again. I pushed the stall door open and stepped out.Eric lay on the floor, eyes wide open, staring at the ceiling. There was a dark gash across his neck. The blood had nearly stopped flowing.The position of his right hand was strange; his fingers curled as if trying to grasp something

  • Deadline Is Death   Chapter 6

    "Because you’re easy to bully," he laughed."No connections. No friends. If something happened, no one would have your back. That batch of goods needed to be moved fast, and someone had to take the fall. You took it, I got promoted. Simple as that."On the phone, Eric spoke with complete confidence, mocking and sneering without restraint.I hung up.At nine that night, I went to a bar in the north called Night Harbor. Eric often entertained clients there. He had posted about it on his feed.I spotted him right away. His arms were around two women as he laughed loudly in a booth at the bar."That idiot actually called me to ask about it. I nearly died laughing." He shouted to the people beside him. "That was three years ago. What’s the point of digging it up now?"A bald man leaned closer. "Hey, Dawson, what’s the story?""Just a former subordinate who isn't right in the head." Eric waved his hand dismissively. "I cleaned up his mess back then, and now he’s trying to bite me bac

  • Deadline Is Death   Chapter 5

    After leaving the police station, I went straight to the old warehouse district on the west side of the city.Three years ago, Eric had been a regional dispatcher. Any abnormal package that passed through his hands should have been logged. If the records hadn’t been destroyed, they would still be stored in the old archives here.The warehouse manager was an elderly man, dozing off with a radio playing beside him.I slipped inside and found the section labeled "2019–2021 Incident Parcels".My flashlight swept across the labels on the boxes and stopped on one number: FL-190915.Hawthorne Ridge Apartments.September 15, 2019.The same day I was fired.I pried the box open. Inside was only a thin folder. The first page was the package detail sheet.Sender: Blank.Recipient: Noah Vale (signed for by courier himself).Item description: ToyBut the weight column read clearly: 4.7 kilograms.What kind of toy weighed that much?The incident report stated that at 3:00 p.m., I had col

  • Deadline Is Death   Chapter 4

    I flipped the newspaper clipping over.On the back was a one-inch ID photo.The man in the photo was wearing a courier uniform and a cap. Despite his young features, his eyes looked worn and exhausted. He was forcing a smile at the camera, the curve of his mouth stiff and unnatural.That face…The features, the contours, even the distance between the brows and eyes, were identical.The mirror slipped from my hand and shattered on the floor.Was it really… me?Fragments scattered everywhere, each shard reflecting my stunned expression.That afternoon, I went to the police station.The officers told me that Mrs. Calder’s grandson had already identified the body."We'll have to wait for the autopsy to determine the exact cause of death, but the family doesn’t seem to want to pursue it further. They’ve already signed off.""The family?" I froze. "Didn’t she live alone?""Her son is overseas. He authorized a friend to handle the arrangements." Officer Ward pointed toward the end

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status